pbromaghin
Subscriber
But patents don't produce film. People and physical infrastructure do.And it should sell all its film-related patents to another company that will take better care of them.
But patents don't produce film. People and physical infrastructure do.
But patents don't produce film. People and physical infrastructure do.
I understand what you meant. I pointed towards industrial reality. Knowledge transfer doesn't consist of putting patents into a box and shipping them halfway across the globe.That's what I meant. Let other people produce the stuff.
Knowledge transfer doesn't consist of putting patents into a box and shipping them halfway across the globe.
And I understand that. Then again, if I make a remark about, let's say art history, you're bound to correct me if I'm too haphazard. Since your remark now happens to be in my field of work, well, I thought I'd at least point out that A and B aren't really linked with recognizable line. Without wanting to write a thesis on it. Oh no, not again.But since this whole subject lives in that wonderful realm where hypothesis, assumption, presumption and presupposition all meet for one big "Let's Guess the Future" party, I knew it was OK to take a massive shortcut to get from A to B
I understand what you meant. I pointed towards industrial reality. Knowledge transfer doesn't consist of putting patents into a box and shipping them halfway across the globe.
Unlikely, I know. But I’m really going to miss them if they go. They make the good stuff.
Great. Well that would/will be the official end of this hobby for me. Time to finally make the digital transition.
Great. Well that would/will be the official end of film/darkroom for me. Time to finally make the digital transition, I guess.
Can someone remind me again about the Kodak Alaris/Kodak Eastman difference? Who actually manufactures, markets and distributes their film, and is the film-side of their larger business likely to be impacted by the above?
Come on over to the dark side. We've got cookies and whatnot.Time to finally make the digital transition, I guess.
Can someone remind me again about the Kodak Alaris/Kodak Eastman difference?
When someone says something like this, I always have to picture a gigantic excavator that picks up the Kodak film coating line including the bedrock several dozens of feet down below floor level and cart it over to another continent. Then drop it into place in the outskirts of Mobberley as some blokes pop into the nearest pub to pick up some workers and hand out blue and white lab coats left and right and hey presto - film is reborn!Maybe I can hope that Harman would acquire the film business for cheap, but that is probably just wishful thinking.
When someone says something like this, I always have to picture a gigantic excavator that picks up the Kodak film coating line including the bedrock several dozens of feet down below floor level and cart it over to another continent. Then drop it into place in the outskirts of Mobberley as some blokes pop into the nearest pub to pick up some workers and hand out blue and white lab coats left and right and hey presto - film is reborn!
That's of course kind of facetious - although I find it mostly an amusing mental picture. A more realistic scenario that could play out is that if Eastman folds, it'll be split up into a couple of parts that roughly align to certain activities. The inkjet business can become a business and everything related to film and other thin media manufacturing and coating could become a business as well. That film-business (which would revolve only in part around photographic film) would then be acquired by a suitable candidate. Harman is evidently far too small. There's an off chance that someone might be able to recombine Alaris and the film part of Eastman into a single business. Most likely, a similar venture capitalist to the present owners of Harman and Alaris would grab up the Eastman film business and try to milk it as best as they can. The short-term impact of such a scenario could well be relatively little change for us. In the long term, of course, as always, all bets are off.
That's still a frighteningly short line from A to a possible B, btw.
With respect, this may be a bit premature because ...
The end is not nigh.
- As someone pointed out, Kodak goes through this cycle periodically to restructure its debt.
- They can declare bankruptcy and get out from under their pension obligations. I watched this happen at United Airlines with friends of mine. What happens is that the government steps in to run the pension program and the company in question is off the hook behind the bankruptcy. The big downside of this is that the employees to not get anything near the full pension promised. Well that, and the taxpayers have to eat the costs, at least in part.
- Kodak hasn't made paper in years so there is no further loss there.
- Film is widely available from global sources.
- Most monochrome chemistry can easily be found from other vendors and/or mixed in your own darkroom with a minimal investment in safety and mixing equipment. Kodak's chemical quality control problems had me moving that way anyway.
- The only real loss here would be Tmax and Tri-X for monochrome shooters, and the various C-41, E6 emulsions still made by Kodak. While I know the colour films have a faithful following, realistically, digital has pretty much replaced what they do and the scale of users for these films appear to me to be far smaller than for monochrome.
- Hollyweird may come to the rescue on the film front, you never know.
- Note that high end camera brands like Leica have a vested interest in having people continue to buy their toys. You never know what they might do. Leica Eastman, anyone? Note that they are already partnering with Adox (?) to sell Leica branded film.
P.S. As to digital, you can buy a LOT of non-Kodak film and paper (even if you are in the US paying tariffs) for the cost of an a good digital camera, monitor, colorimeter, and printer ...
Can someone remind me again about the Kodak Alaris/Kodak Eastman difference? Who actually manufactures, markets and distributes their film, and is the film-side of their larger business likely to be impacted by the above?
....
- The only real loss here would be Tmax and Tri-X for monochrome shooters, and the various C-41, E6 emulsions still made by Kodak. While I know the colour films have a faithful following, realistically, digital has pretty much replaced what they do and the scale of users for these films appear to me to be far smaller than for monochrome.
- ...
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